登陆注册
20288000000039

第39章 BY THE RIVER(1)

IT did not take us younger ones long to get acquainted with our new home,and to love it.

To live beside a river had been to me a child's dream of romance.

Rivers,as I pictured them,came down from the mountains,and were born in the clouds.They were bordered by green meadows,and graceful trees leaned over to gaze into their bright mirrors.Our shallow tidal creek was the only river I had known,except as visioned on the pages of the "Pilgrim's Progress,"and in the Book of Revelation.And the Merrimack was like a continuation of that dream.

I soon made myself familiar with the rocky nooks along Pawtucket Falls,shaded with hemlocks and white birches.Strange new wild flowers grew beside the rushing waters,--among them Sir Walter Scott's own harebells,which I had never thought of except as blossoms of poetry;here they were,as real to me as to his Lady of the Lake!I loved the harebell,the first new flower the river gave me,as I had never loved a flower before.

There was but one summers holiday for us who worked in the mills --the Fourth of July.We made a point of spending it out of doors,making excursions down the river to watch the meeting of the slow Concord and the swift Merrimack;or around by the old canal-path,to explore the mysteries of the Guard Locks;or across the bridge,clambering up Dracut Heights,to look away to the dim blue mountains.

On that morning it was our custom to wake one another at four o'clock,and start off on a tramp together over some retired road whose chief charm was its unfamiliarity,returning to a very late breakfast,with draggled gowns and aprons full of dewy wild roses.No matter if we must get up at five the next morning and go back to our hum-drum toil,we should have the roses to take with us for company,and the sweet air of the woodland which lingered about them would scent our thoughts all day,and make us forget the oily smell of the machinery.

We were children still,whether at school or at work,and Nature still held us close to her motherly heart.Nature came very close to the mill-gates,too,in those days.There was green grass all around them;violets and wild geraniums grew by the canals;and long stretches of open land between the corporation buildings and the street made the town seem country-like.

The slope behind our mills (the "Lawrence"Mills)was a green lawn;and in front of some of them the overseers had gay flower-gardens;we passed in to our work through a splendor of dahlias and hollyhocks.

The gray stone walls of St.Anne's church and rectory made a picturesque spot in the middle of the town,remaining still as a lasting monument to the religious purpose which animated the first manufacturers.The church arose close to the oldest corporation (the "Merrimack"),and seemed a part of it,and a part,also,of the original idea of the place itself,which was always a city of worshipers,although it came to be filled with a population which preferred meeting-houses to churches.I admired the church greatly.I had never before seen a real one;never anything but a plain frame meeting-house;and it and its benign,apostolic-looking rector were like a leaf out of an English story-book.

And so,also,was the tiny white cottage nearly opposite,set in the middle of a pretty flower-garden that sloped down to the canal.In the garden there was almost always a sweet little girl in a pink gown and white sunbonnet gathering flowers when Ipassed that way,and I often went out of my path to do so.These relieved the monotony of the shanty-like shops which bordered the main street.The town had sprung up with a mushroom-rapidity,and there was no attempt at veiling the newness of its bricks and mortar,its boards and paint.

But there were buildings that had their own individuality,and asserted it.One of these was a mud-cabin with a thatched roof,that looked as if it had emigrated bodily from the bogs of Ireland.It had settled itself down into a green hollow by the roadside,and it looked as much at home with the lilac-tinted crane's-bill and yellow buttercups as if it had never lost sight of the shamrocks of Erin.

Now,too,my childish desire to see a real beggar was gratified.

Straggling petitioners for "cold victuals"hung around our back yard,always of Hibernian extraction;and a slice of bread was rewarded with a shower of benedictions that lost itself upon us in the flood of its own incomprehensible brogue.

Some time every summer a fleet of canoes would glide noiselessly up the river,and a company of Penobscot Indians would land at a green point almost in sight from our windows.Pawtucket Falls had always been one of their favorite camping-places.Their strange endeavors,to combine civilization with savagery were a great source of amusement to us;men and women clad alike in loose gowns,stove-pipe hats,and moccasons;grotesque relies of aboriginal forest-life.The sight of these uncouth-looking red men made the romance fade entirely out of the Indian stories we had heard.Still their wigwam camp was a show we would not willingly have missed.

The transition from childhood to girlhood,when a little girl has had an almost unlimited freedom of out-of-door life,is practically the toning down of a mild sort of barbarianism,and is often attended by a painfully awkward self-consciousness.Ihad an innate dislike of conventionalities.I clung to the child's inalienable privilege of running half wild;and when Ifound that I really was growing up,I felt quite rebellious.

同类推荐
  • 佛说第一义法胜经

    佛说第一义法胜经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 太上老君大存思图注诀

    太上老君大存思图注诀

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Helen

    Helen

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 吕祖师三尼医世说述

    吕祖师三尼医世说述

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • The Argonautica

    The Argonautica

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 在樱花树下长久的等待

    在樱花树下长久的等待

    青春,是一场盛宴,总有人为它把酒言欢;青春,又是一座坟墓。总有人会为它祭奠。时间,让我们学会了珍惜;岁月,又让我们互相蹉跎。没有如果,不是因为时光无法倒退,而是因为,我们都没有资格后悔。飞蛾扑火又有何妨,没关系,我可以在回忆里等你。无爱无伤,无欲则刚,倘若注定结束,不如从未开始……
  • 宋徽宗御解道德真经解义

    宋徽宗御解道德真经解义

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 携手和云归

    携手和云归

    把千秋霸业,换了如花美眷,携手归去彩云间。
  • 致命游戏:首席别乱来

    致命游戏:首席别乱来

    苏应阳将过而立之年,身边美女无数,偶遇岑恬沫,她不受他的外表迷惑,不屈服于他的金钱权势,反而避之惟恐不及,不甘作罢,他不择手断,先是让她的好友卷入不归之途,再断她所爱之人的前程,原来只是不甘,只是游戏,最后却深深迷恋,无法自拔。
  • 《异世重生:绝世公主》

    《异世重生:绝世公主》

    自己神偷皆杀手却被一辆破车给撞死了呢!!这什么逻辑!坑爹不坑爹!来到阎王殿,阎王说我是他媳妇的妹妹,自己原先是王母身边法力无边的仙女,因犯了天条被贬下凡间。听完我不禁感叹!原来这是上还真有天庭和神仙这“东西”。更让我感叹的是我竟是仙女下凡!阎王又说的话更让我吃惊,他说可以看在我是他媳妇的妹妹上给我家三十年寿,让我去替代异世(俗称另一个空间的古代)里一个快要死去的公主,让我自己当公主,虽说那公主是个有点丑,但身份是公主,让我当公主吗?嗯?当公主也挺不错的,阎王都给自己加寿了,还图个啥勒!安安心心当三十年公主呗!
  • 气鼎天下

    气鼎天下

    一个少年,为了救母亲,踏上了修炼的征程…………等级制度:气功,气鼎。等级制度:练体九段,念气士,气功师,大气功师,炼鼎前期,炼鼎中期,炼鼎后期,气鼎师,神鼎师。新人写书,求宝贵意见~~~~~~~
  • 梦里花落嫁衣伤

    梦里花落嫁衣伤

    因为车祸而努力相爱,踏入婚姻殿堂的那一刻,她猛然发现真相,他是她的仇人,她要嫁的不是他。他默默的守着她,栀子花香陪伴他们青梅竹马。她被车祸害得失去记忆,却错爱了别人。他为了心爱的她进了监狱,她却忘记了他。几个女人几个男人,一台戏,谁是谁小三。
  • 家有哑妻要逆袭

    家有哑妻要逆袭

    她是一个乖巧听话的哑巴,却仍旧被歹毒的姐姐送去那个恶魔的床上。他记住了她的味道却忘记了她是谁。再次见面,她却以弟弟的女人身份出现。这是一对姐妹,一对兄弟之间的纠葛。到底最后守护在他们身边的是不是最对的那个人呢?--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 高唐梦

    高唐梦

    李饮家贫,从小习毛体,喜诗词,上高中不久,便开始了大唐开元之旅。本书风格写实,文笔先下重墨,之后会浓淡相宜。——这是芹菜的第一本书,肯定会有许多不尽如人意的地方,真心希望得到大家的宽容、理解与支持。——以下附庸风雅——香草美人,当从那馨香之物始。至于仗剑去国,游历天涯的情志,大唐除了这白之侠气和饮之儒雅,竟是难寻其右。饮穿大唐,唯有缚鸡之力,未得莫测神功。此人生存之道太差,只运气极佳,又因儿时于那诗词歌赋的些许嗜好,竟在大唐成了正果。至于正果究竟为何物,以愚拙见,当是免不了正头娘子以齐家,偏枕美妾以风流。再如治国、平天下者,当是凭栏浊酒咏醉之词,不足为据,只做流年笑谈罢了。
  • 尸家客栈

    尸家客栈

    身怀僵尸王将臣血脉,脚踏华夏三山五岳。完成渡劫的旱魃尸王、阴山枯骨洞下的器具、茫茫东海之下的秦始皇衣冠冢,西王母的玉片、九华山的血路、长白山的青铜门,潜伏在尘世中的永生者,到底还有多少?